About

Dr. Robert Fisher is a faculty member in the physics department at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. He earned his BS in physics with honors from Caltech in 1994. At Caltech he was the recipient of the George W. Green Memorial Prize in creative scholarship, awarded annually to an undergraduate for original research beyond the normal requirements of specific courses. He received his PhD in physics from the University of California at Berkeley in 2002, where he received a NASA Graduate Research Fellowship. He was subsequently a postdoctoral research scholar at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL, 2002-2005), and research scientist at the Department of Energy Advanced Simulation and Computing Flash Center in the Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics at the University of Chicago (2005-2008). While at Chicago, he was also an adjunct faculty member at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where he taught a popular course on introductory astronomy for undergraduate art majors.

The primary theme of Dr. Fisher's research is the fundamental physics of turbulent flows, and its application to the two endpoints of stellar evolution—star formation and supernovae—using a combination of theoretical and computational techniques. While at LLNL, he developed the first quantitative theory of the distribution of stellar binary periods. At Chicago, Dr. Fisher led an international team of computational scientists and physicists in the development and analysis of the largest three-dimensional computer simulation of weakly-compressible fully-developed turbulence ever completed. Also at Chicago, Dr. Fisher was part of the team to carry out the first self-consistent computational simulation of the three-dimension detonation of a Type Ia supernova. This research on turbulence and Type Ia supernovae was honored in 2009 by the Department of Energy with a Certificate of Service.

At the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, Dr. Fisher leads a group of graduate and undergraduate students pursuing several exciting research projects in star formation and supernovae. He invites graduate and undergraduate students who are interested in theoretical astrophysics and computational physics to drop by to speak with him. More information about Dr. Fisher's group, including recent publications, talks, and simulation animations, can be found at his research group website, novastella.org.

Link

Honors

DAAD Fellowship
German Academic Exchange Service (Germany, Bonn) - DAAD, 2023-2024
Invited Plenary, "The Fate of Exploding White Dwarfs"
American Astronomical Society (United States, Washington) - AAS, 1/12/2018
Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics (KITP) Scholar
University of California, Santa Barbara (United States, Santa Barbara) - UCSB, 2014-2017
Certificate of Service
United States Department of Energy (United States, Washington) - DOE, 2009
NASA Graduate Student Research Fellowship
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (United States, Washington) - NASA, 1998-2001
George W. and Bernice E. Green Prize for Creative Scholarship
California Institute of Technology (United States, Pasadena) - CIT, 1994

Organizational Affiliations

Department of Physics, College of Engineering, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth

Visiting Professor, International Center for Relativistic Astrophysics (Italy, Pescara)

Past Affiliations

Research Scientist and Astrophysics Group Leader, University of Chicago (United States, Chicago) - UC

Postdoctoral Research Associate, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (United States, Livermore) - LLNL

Visiting Faculty, Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies (Germany, Heidelberg) - HITS

Visiting Faculty, Center for Astrophysics Harvard & Smithsonian (United States, Cambridge) - CfA

Education

Physics
2002, Doctor of Philosophy, University of California, Berkeley (United States, Berkeley) - UCB
Physics
1994, Bachelor of Science (BS), California Institute of Technology (United States, Pasadena) - CIT